Adsorption dynamics of water on Pt{110}-(1 x 2).

J Chem Phys

Department of Chemistry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.

Published: March 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how water molecules stick to a platinum surface (Pt{110}-(1 x 2)) using advanced techniques to measure their attachment rates at low temperatures.
  • The initial sticking probability of water (s(0)) is found to be 0.54 with specific kinetic energy, showing a unique relationship between molecular beam flux and sticking efficiency at low coverage.
  • Observations indicate that the energy and alignment of the water molecules significantly influence their adsorption behavior on the surface, particularly at certain energy thresholds.

Article Abstract

The dynamics of H(2)O adsorption on Pt{110}-(1 x 2) is studied using supersonic molecular beam and temperature programed desorption techniques. The sticking probabilities are measured using the King and Wells method at a surface temperature of 165 K. The absolute initial sticking probability s(0) of H(2)O is 0.54+/-0.03 for an incident kinetic energy of 27 kJmol. However, an unusual molecular beam flux dependence on s(0) is also found. At low water coverage (theta<1), the sticking probability is independent of coverage due either to diffusion in an extrinsic precursor state formed above bilayer islands or to incorporation into the islands. We define theta=1 as the water coverage when the dissociative sticking probability of D(2) on a surface predosed with water has dropped to zero. The slow falling H(2)O sticking probability at theta>1 results from compression of the bilayer and the formation of multilayers. Temperature programed desorption of water shows fractional order kinetics consistent with hydrogen-bonded islands on the surface. A remarkable dependence of the initial sticking probability on the translational (1-27 kJ/mol) and internal energies of water is observed: s(0) is found to be essentially a step function of translational energy, increasing fivefold at a threshold energy of 5 kJ/mol. The threshold migrates to higher energies with increasing nozzle temperature (300-700 K). We conclude that both rotational state and rotational alignment of the water molecules in the seeded supersonic expansion are implicated in dictating the adsorption process.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.2894301DOI Listing

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